TC BioPharm (Holdings) PLC ("TC BioPharm" or the "Company") (NASDAQ: TCBP) a clinical stage biotechnology company developing platform allogeneic gamma-delta T cell therapies for cancer and other indications, today announces dosing of 5 new patients in the ACHIEVE Phase 2b trial ongoing in the UK.
Currently, the trial has successfully dosed 6 patients with their first of 4 possible doses at the higher dose level. Each 5mL dose contains up to 230 million gamma delta T cells, and a patient is expected to receive up to an approximate 1 billion gamma delta T cells over four doses. Five patients have received their second dose, with 2 of these patients having also received their third dose. This correlates with TCBP's step-wise approach to process improvements, as implemented in Q4 2023, and further steps taken to amend the trial protocol in the first quarter of 2024. New patients will continue to be identified, screened, and enrolled into the study.
"TCBP is excited to announce our rapid progression in the ACHIEVE Phase 2b trial with very strong enrolment in the second part of the trial using the higher dose," stated, Bryan Kobel, CEO of TC BioPharm. "TCB008 is potentially a game-changing monotherapy for blood cancers, and the strong recruitment and patient retention rates are testament to clinician/physician interest in TCB008 as a monotherapy in leukemia. We're proud of the milestones accomplished to date, having rapidly dosed 6 patients with an additional 10 patients lined up. It is encouraging to see re-dosing of several patients, which we believe reflects positively on the steps the organization took in 2023 and early 2024. TCBP remains poised to execute on our clinical trial plans in 2024 and into 2025, including ACHIEVE and ACHIEVE2, as well as our expanded manufacturing capabilities to enhance our operational capabilities and our economic efficiencies."
The ACHIEVE UK clinical trial is an open-label, phase II study designed to evaluate the efficacy and effectiveness of TCB008 in patients with AML or MDS/AML, with either refractory or relapsed disease.
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